Dangerous Voices

Dangerous Voices
Title Dangerous Voices PDF eBook
Author Gail Holst-Warhaft
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 197
Release 2002-09-11
Genre History
ISBN 1134908083

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In Dangerous Voices Holst-Warhaft investigates the power and meaning of the ancient lament, especially women's mourning of the dead, and sets out to discover why legislation was introduced to curb these laments in antiquity. An investigation of laments ranging from New Guinea to Greece suggests that this essentially female art form gave women considerable power over the rituals of death. The threat they posed to the Greek state caused them to be appropriated by male writers including the tragedians. Holst-Warhaft argues that the loss of the traditional lament in Greece and other countries not only deprives women of their traditional control over the rituals of death but leaves all mourners impoverished.

Queer Voices

Queer Voices
Title Queer Voices PDF eBook
Author F. Jarman-Ivens
Publisher Springer
Total Pages 299
Release 2011-06-20
Genre Social Science
ISBN 0230119557

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This book argues that there are some important implications of the role the voice plays in popular music when thinking about processes of identification. The central thesis is that the voice in popular music is potentially uncanny (Freud's unheimlich), and that this may invite or guard against identification by the listener.

Voices in Psychosis

Voices in Psychosis
Title Voices in Psychosis PDF eBook
Author Angela Woods
Publisher Oxford University Press
Total Pages 448
Release 2022-08-11
Genre Psychology
ISBN 0192653458

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Voice-hearing experiences associated with psychosis are highly varied, frequently distressing, poorly understood, and deeply stigmatised, even within mental health settings. Voices in Psychosis responds to the urgent need for new ways of listening to and making sense of these experiences. It brings multiple disciplinary, clinical, and experiential perspectives to bear on an original and extraordinarily rich body of testimony: transcripts of forty in-depth phenomenological interviews conducted with people who hear voices and who have accessed Early Intervention in Psychosis services. The book addresses the social, clinical, and research contexts in which the interviews took place, thoroughly investigating the embodied, multisensory, affective, linguistic, spatial, and relational qualities of voice-hearing experiences. The nature, politics, and consequences of these analytic endeavours is a focus of critical reflection throughout. Each chapter gives a multifaceted insight into the experiences of voice-hearers in the North East of England and to their wider resonance in contexts ranging from medieval mysticism to Amazonian shamanism, from the nineteenth-century novel to the twenty-first century survivor movement. By deepening and extending our understanding of hearing voices in psychosis in a striking way, the book will be an invaluable resource not only for academics in the field, but for mental health practitioners and members of the voice-hearing community. An open access title available under the terms of a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International licence.

Desert Voices

Desert Voices
Title Desert Voices PDF eBook
Author Moneera Al-Ghadeer
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages 257
Release 2009-05-30
Genre Literary Collections
ISBN 0857711962

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The Bedouin, or 'desert dwellers', have a rich cultural heritage often expressed through music and poetry. Here, Moneera Al-Ghadeer provides us with the first comparative reading of women's oral poetry from Saudi Arabia. She examines women's lyrics of love, desire, mourning and grievance. We come to understand Bedouin mores and - most significantly - the unique description of a desert that is consistently held to be infinite, evocative, stimulating and an eternal freedom. As the first English translation and analysis of this poetry, "Desert Voices" is both a gesture to preserving the oral poetic tradition of Bedouin women and a radical critique addressing the exclusion of their poetry from current academic literary studies. The book provides invaluable material for reflection in the debates around oral culture and women's poetic composition while it translates, presents and critically examins a genre, which opens Arabic poetry and literature to contemporary theory and criticism.

Voices at Work

Voices at Work
Title Voices at Work PDF eBook
Author Andromache Karanika
Publisher JHU Press
Total Pages 317
Release 2014-04
Genre History
ISBN 1421412551

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In other words, she gives a voice to silence.

Voice and Voices in Antiquity

Voice and Voices in Antiquity
Title Voice and Voices in Antiquity PDF eBook
Author Niall Slater
Publisher BRILL
Total Pages 456
Release 2016-10-18
Genre Literary Criticism
ISBN 9004329730

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Voice and Voices in Antiquity surveys the changing concept of voice and voices in oral traditions and subsequent literary genres of antiquity, both fictional (authorial and characterized) and historical, and from Greece and the Near East to the western Roman Empire.

A Dangerous New World

A Dangerous New World
Title A Dangerous New World PDF eBook
Author Meghan Sterling
Publisher
Total Pages 152
Release 2019-11-15
Genre Climatic changes
ISBN 9780578598284

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An anthology of poetry, essays, and visual art on the climate crisis by Maine writers and artists with a foreword by Governor Janet Mills.